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Roman Britain in 1914, by F. Haverfield
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Title: Roman Britain in 1914
Author: F. Haverfield
Release Date: August 25, 2006 [EBook #19115]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROMAN BRITAIN IN 1914 ***
Produced by Ted Garvin, David Garcia and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
[Illustration: FIG. 1. POTTERY STAMPS AND STAMPED POTTERY FROM HOLT.
(A) Head of Silenus (1/1). Probably an artist's die, for casting stamps for stamped ware (p. 20)
(B) Fragment of stamped ware (1/1), with ornament imitated from Samian (p. 19)
(C) STAMP FOR MORTARIUM (1/1)]
THE BRITISH ACADEMY SUPPLEMENTAL PAPERS. III
Roman Britain in 1914
By Professor F. Haverfield
Fellow of the Academy
London: 1915 Published for the British Academy By Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press Amen Corner, E.C.
[Transcribers Note: Professor Francis Haverfield]
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 4
PREFACE 5
A. RETROSPECT OF FINDS MADE IN 1914 7
(a) Raedykes, near Stonehaven; Wall of Pius; Traprain Law; Northumberland (Featherwood, Chesterholm, Corbridge); Weardale (co. Durham); Appleby; Ambleside (fort at Borrans); Lancaster; Ribchester; Slack (near Huddersfield); Holt; Cardiff; Richborough.
(b) Wroxeter; Lincoln; Gloucester; London; country houses and farms; Lowbury (Berkshire); Beachy Head, Eastbourne; Parc-y-Meirch (North Wales) 21
B. ROMAN INSCRIPTIONS FOUND IN 1914 29
Balmuildy (Wall of Pius); Traprain Law; Featherwood (altar); Chesterholm (two altars); Corbridge (inscribed tile); Weardale (bronze paterae); Holt (centurial stone and tile); Lincoln; London; rediscovered milestone near Appleby.
C. PUBLICATIONS RELATING TO ROMAN BRITAIN IN 1914.
1. General 38
2. Special sites or districts 41
APPENDIX: LIST OF PERIODICALS HAVING REFERENCE TO ROMAN BRITAIN 64
INDEX OF PLACES 67
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
1. Pottery-stamps and stamped pottery from Holt (see p. 19) Frontispiece
2. Plan of Roman Fort at Borrans, Ambleside. From a plan by Mr. R. G. Collingwood 10
3. Sketch plan of Principia (Praetorium) of Roman Fort at Ribchester. After a plan by Mr. D. Atkinson and Prof. W. B. Anderson 13
4. Sketch plan of part of the Roman Fort at Slack. From a plan by Messrs. A. Woodward and P. Ross 14
5. Holt, plan of site 16
6. Holt, plan of barracks 17
7. Holt, plan of dwelling-house and bath-house 17
8. Holt, plan of kilns 18
9. Holt, reconstruction of the kilns shown in fig. 8 18
10, 11. Holt, stamped 'imitation Samian' ware 20
(Figs. 1 and 5-11 are from photographs or drawings lent by Mr. A. Acton, of Wrexham)
12. Sketch plan of Roman bath-house at East Grimstead, after a plan by Mr. Heywood Sumner 24
13. Sketch plan of Romano-British house at North Ash, after a plan prepared by the Dartford Antiquarian Society 25
14. Plan of Romano-British house at Clanville. After a plan by the Rev. G. Engleheart, in Archaeologia 26
15. Fragment of inscription found at Balmuildy 29
16. Altar found at Chesterholm, drawn from a photograph 31
17-19. Graves and grave-nails, Infirmary Field, Chester. From drawings and photographs by Prof. Newstead 41-2
20-22. The Mersea grave-mound. From the Report of the Morant Club and Essex Archaeological Society 43
23, 24. Margidunum, plan and seal-box. From the Antiquary 51
25-28. Plan, section and views of the podium of the temple at Wroxeter. From the Report by Mr. Bushe-Fox 53
29. General plan of the Roman fort and precincts at Gellygaer. After plans by Mr. J. Ward 59
30. Postholes at Gellygaer 63
For the loan of blocks 14, 17-20, 21-2, and 23-4, I am indebted respectively to the Delegates of the Clarendon Press, Prof. Newstead, and the Liverpool University Press, the Morant Club and the Essex Archaeological Society, and the publisher of the Antiquary.
PREFACE
The contents of the present volume are of much the same character as those of its predecessor, 'Roman Britain in 1913'. The first section gives a retrospect of the chief finds made in 1914, so far as they are known to me. The second section is a more detailed and technical survey of the inscriptions found in Britain during that year. The third and longest section is a summary, with some attempt at estimate and criticism, of books and articles dealing with Roman Britain which appeared in 1914 or at least bear that date on cover or title-page. At the end I have added, for convenience, a list of the English archaeological and other publications which at least sometimes contain noteworthy articles relating to Roman Britain.
The total, both of finds and of publications, is smaller than in 1913. In part the outbreak of war in August called off various supervisors and not a few workmen from excavations then in progress; in one case it prevented a proposed excavation from being begun. It also seems to have retarded the issue of some archaeological periodicals. But the scarcity of finds is much more due to natural causes. The
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